front of house staff acknowledgments mainstage · bergman staged nora in 1981 as part of the...
TRANSCRIPT
Mainstage2017/2018 Season
Presented by the Department of Theatre + Dance
KENNEDY THEATRE STAFFDepartment Chair: Betsy FisherDirector of Theatre: Lurana Donnels O’MalleyProduction Manager: Rick GreaverTheatre Manager: Jessica L. JacobOperations Coordinator: John WellsTechnical Director: Gerald KawaokaCostume Shop Manager: Hannah Schauer GalliAssistant Costume Shop Manager: Iris KimOffice Staff: Lori Chun
FRI/SAT, APR 13 & 14* at 7:30 pmFRI/SAT, APR 20 & 21* at 7:30 pmMatinée SUN, APR 22 at 2:00 pm
*Pre-Show Chat at 6:45 pm Talk-Back follows the Fri. Apr. 20 Performance
FRONT OF HOUSE STAFFBox Office Supervisors: Mark Shiroma, Lexi Moreno & Christian CesarBox Office Staff: Madi Franks, Joanne Aire-OaihimirePublicity Director: Nicholas BrownPublicity Assistant: Katherine AltmanGraphic Designers: Michael Donato & Jessica JacobPhotographer: John WellsPromotional Video: Michelle PitelKennedy Theatre House Manager: Katherine AltmanAssistant House Managers: Joanne Aire-Oaihimire, Julian Cepeda, Madi Franks, Lauren Vance
ON STAGE IN THE LAB THEATRE
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Your donation will help provide endowed support that will generate income for student scholarships, extraordinary production expenses,
visiting scholars or theatre experts, and professional development opportunities for faculty.
To donate online, go to https://giving.uhfoundation.org/ and enter “Friends of Kennedy Theatre Endowment” or visit: https://giving.uhfoundation.org/funds/20553803
By Mail: send a check to 2444 Dole St. Bachman #105 Honolulu, HI 96822. Payable to: UHF/Friends of Kennedy Theatre Endowment
Memo: Friends of Kennedy Theatre/#20553803
SUPPORT THE ARTS!
The Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival 50®, part of the Rubenstein Arts Access Program, is generously funded by David and Alice Rubenstein. Special thanks to The Harold and Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust for supporting the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts’ Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival. Additional support is provided by The Honorable Stuart Bernstein and Wilma E. Bernstein; the Dr. Gerald and Paula McNichols Foundation; and Beatrice and Anthony Welters and the AnBryce Foundation. KCACTF is part of JFKC: A Centennial Celebration of John F. Kennedy, inspired by five enduring ideals often ascribed to JFK: Courage, Freedom, Justice, Service, and Gratitude. Support for JKFC: A Centennial Celebration of John F. Kennedy is provided by Ambassador Elizabeth Bagley, Chevron, the Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation, and Target. Kennedy Center education and related artistic programming is made possible through the generosity of the National Committee for the Performing Arts and the President’s Advisory Committee on the Arts.This production is entered in the Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival (KCACTF). The aims of this national theater education program are to identify and promote quality in college-level theater production. To this end, each production entered is eligible for a response by a regional KCACTF representative, and selected students and faculty are invited to participate in KCACTF programs involving scholarships, internships, grants and awards for actors, directors, dramaturgs, playwrights, designers, stage managers and critics at both the regional and national levels. Productions entered on the Participating level are eligible for invitation to the KCACTF regional festival and may also be considered for national awards recognizing outstanding achievement in production, design, direction and performance. Last year more than 1,300 productions were entered in the KCACTF involving more than 200,000 students nationwide. By entering this production, our theater department is sharing in the KCACTF goals to recognize, reward, and celebrate the exemplary work produced in college and university theaters across the nation.
Nora is entered in the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival as a Participating production.
Visit us on the web at manoa.hawaii.edu/liveonstage/kennedy-theatre
Tony the Fantastic Fireman! LIVE: One Show OnlyBy Malia K Wessel, April 13, 14, 20, 21 at 11 p.m.
A new dark comedy about what happens when a well-known children’s television show host sabotages his own career during a live broadcast, despite the efforts of those around him. Filled with silly songs and playful existentialist
humor, this original work is sure to leave an impression.
SEPTEMBER 2018 - MAINSTAGE SERIESDR. SEUSS’S THE CAT IN THE HAT BASED ON THE BOOK BY DR. SEUSS, ORIGINALLY PRODUCED BY THE NATIONAL THEATRE OF GREAT BRITAIN
OCTOBER 2018 - PRIMETIME SERIESTHE GOOD PERSON OF SETZUAN
BY BERTOLT BRECHTTRANSLATED BY WENDY ARONS
ADAPTED BY TONY KUSHNERFEBRUARY 2019 - MAINSTAGE SERIESA MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S BOLLYWOOD DREAMSHAKESPEARE’S MOST POPULAR ROMANTIC COMEDY REIMAGINED
APRIL 2019 - PRIMETIME SERIESTHE COUNTRY WIFE
BY WILLIAM WYCHERLY
NEXT SEASON: LET’S PLAY!A SNEAK PEEK OF
THEATRE HIGHLIGHTS
NEXT SEASON!
PROGRAM SUBJECT TO CHANGE
Dr. Markus Wessendorf, Dr. Glenn Man, Dr.Jinguang (Andrew) Zhang, Dr. Lurana O’Malley, Nicholas Logue, Taurie Kinoshita, Michelle Pitel, John Wells, Melisa Vargas, Melinda, Elsa, Viola, Elija & Jona Moore,
Dvorah Governale, Carole Mayo Jenkins, The Ladies of the Big Island, The Ladies of KRC, Friends of Kennedy Theatre, the brilliant minds of THEA 614C, and the faculty and staff of the Dept. of Theatre + Dance
for their encouragement and support.In loving memory of Irene Gilbert.
The UHM ticket program is supported in part by a grant from the Student Activities and Program Fee Board.
Kennedy Theatre is a member of the Hawai̒i State Theatre Council.
Nora, translated and adapted by Frederick J. & Lise-Lone Marker, is produced by special arrangement with PLAYWRIGHTS GUILD OF CANADA.
ARTISTIC STAFF CAST(IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE)
DIRECTOR’S NOTEPRODUCTION STAFF
* In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Fine Arts degree
Directed by Stacy RayAssistant Director: Katherine AltmanDramaturgy: Katherine Altman, Keita Beni & Annastasia Fiala-Watkins Choreography: Amy Schiffner Scenic Design: Rachel Filbeck* Costume Design: Marc Marcos* Lighting Design: Joseph GovernaleSound Design: Brian ShevelenkoProjection Design: Joseph GovernaleProperties: Rachel Filbeck
Nora Helmer Christine Lamborn
Torvald Helmer Tyler Haugen Christine Linde Emily Steward
Nils Krogstad Donovan Oakleaf
Dr. Rank Malia Wessel
This show will be performed without an intermission.
Stage Manager: Annastasia Fiala-WatkinsAssistant Stage Managers: Alyssa Reyes, Barry Tuchin & Curran Uno Light Board Operator: Logan TamponSound Board Operator: Judithanne YoungTarantella Musical Arrangement: Ari WessendorfStage Crew: Mayia GreenSet Construction: Jarren Amian, Jonah Bobilin, Makenzie Cammack, Rachel Filbeck, Dylan Lee, Christian Londos, Kela Neil, Alexis Chong TimElectrics Crew: Students from THEA 345 and THEA 221Costume Construction Crew: Annastasia Fiala-Watkins, Michelle Ann NinoWardrobe Supervisor: Max H. PenningtonFaculty Consultants: Michelle A. Bisbee, Brian Shevelenko
The epiphany of change, life in the 21st century, exciting but filled with uncertainty. The play is titled, Nora, but it’s about our lives NOW. We’re asked to do the same things these characters are asked to do: to evaluate, to allow ourselves to feel, to make choices, and ultimately, to change.
We no longer have to wait for the span of a generation to see or feel change - it’s in our daily lives. It’s volatile, jarring, and seemingly unpredictable but never random. The elements of change simmer for a long time waiting only for a catalyst and when that catalyst appears - there’s no avoiding the reaction; an epiphany must occur.
In less than 2 years, we have passed through our own societal epiphanies of change: An election that brought uncomfortable male/female dynamics to the forefront, the exposure of unapologetic prejudice and division, a greater expanse in the financial divide, and the rise of the #Metoo Movement taking feminism and human rights to a new level for both men and women. All of this in the midst of a hyper-sexualized society.
As visionaries of life, Henrik Ibsen and Ingmar Bergman couldn’t have asked for better material. With these few thoughts in mind, we dove into Nora and discovered the timeless brilliance of Ibsen through the laser-sharp perspective of Ingmar Bergman.
Thank you for coming to see the show. The students, faculty, and staff of the Department of Theatre and Dance appreciate the gift of your commitment to supporting the Arts at UH Mānoa.
- Stacy Ray
The Nora you are going to see today explores social issues shaped and reshaped by different lenses of the contexts in which it was created. Nora is Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman’s 1981 stage adaptation of Henrik Ibsen’s classic A Doll House from 1879, and it is presented with our own 2018 interpretation of Bergman’s work.
Ibsen is perhaps the most produced playwright in the world after Shakespeare. His perfection of the use of natural prose dialogue, his predictions of the future for drama, and his depiction of middle class domestic life were revolutionary for the evolution of realist drama. Born in 1828 in the small Norwegian town of Skien, Ibsen’s worldview was influenced in part by his family’s public plummet from middle class living to bankruptcy, and the poverty and humiliation that accompanied it. Interested in poetry and in painting, his gift for symbolism and meaning in both language and visual images informed his playwriting. Ibsen was as irreverent and controversial as he was insightful and poetic, interested in exploring universal questions of what it is to be human.
Bergman, born in Sweden in 1918, drew heavily on his personal life to create powerful, questioning films. These stark explorations of the human condition and human relationships were characterized by intimate two-person scenes, evocative visual imagery, and often deeply internalized, subjective character narration and dream sequences. Even though he is best known for his work in film, his first love was theatrical directing, which he also pursued throughout his life. Incredibly prolific, Bergman wrote or directed more than 60 films and 170 theatrical productions. Much of his theatre career was with the Royal Dramatic Theatre of Stockholm, where he premiered in 1951, served as managing director from 1963-1966, and continued to direct two productions on average per year through his final production in 2002.
Bergman staged Nora in 1981 as part of the Bergman Project, which also included Julie, his adaptation of August Strindberg’s Miss Julie, and a stage version of his television miniseries film, Scenes from a Marriage. Together, these three productions examined the complexities of communication and partnership between the two sexes. Bergman pared the A Doll House script down by a third, condensing the story into 90 minutes and cutting the characters of Nora and Torvald’s maids and their children, with most scenes then featuring only two characters. He removed the convention of realistic exits and entrances, having the cast remain on stage during the entire production, serving, along with the audience, as the observing judge and jury to the other characters, and allowing characters to simply appear in space, driven by the internal action of the story.
Our production of Nora explores the ideas of both Ibsen and Bergman through a contemporary lens, updating the setting and the characters. For example, Dr. Rank’s casting as a female character reframes her relationship with Nora and Torvald, and therefore Nora and Torvald’s relationship with one another. This production aims to raise questions about gender communication, the ways in which human beings collectively and individually shape identity, the ways in which societal pressures and ingrained assumptions shape all humans in ways both seen and unseen, and about ways we can all inch toward that looming goal we call “progress” together.
FROM THE DRAMATURGY TEAM
FRONT OF HOUSE INFORMATIONFor large print programs or any other accessibility requests please contact the House Manager or call the Kennedy Theatre Box Office at 956-7655. To arrange a Campus Security Escort from any two points on campus after dark, please see a House Manager.
As a courtesy to your fellow audience members and to our performers, please remember that eating, drinking, video recording, photography and use of cell phones and other electronic devices is not allowed inside the theatre. Please take a moment to turn off any sound or light emitting devices now.